The following comment by Frank Rich appeared in the New York Times on 25 June, 2006. (His comment was copyright and appears here without permission. I will remove it at his request.)
 

 
A shadow government rife with corruption
by Frank Rich

 

As the remains of two slaughtered American soldiers, Privates Thomas Tucker and Kristian Menchaca, were discovered near Yusufiya, Iraq, on Tuesday, a former White House official named David Safavian was convicted in Washington on four charges of lying and obstruction of justice. The three men had something in common: All had enlisted in government service in a time of war. The similarities end there. The difference between Safavian's kind of public service and that of the soldiers says everything about the disconnect between the government that has sabotaged this war and the brave men and women who have volunteered in good faith to fight it.

Privates Tucker and Menchaca made the ultimate sacrifice. Their bodies were so mutilated that they could be identified only by DNA. Safavian, by contrast, can be readily identified by smell. His idea of wartime sacrifice overseas was to chew over government business with the Jack Abramoff gang while on a golfing junket in Scotland. But what's most indicative of Safavian's public service is not his felonies in the Abramoff-Tom DeLay axis of scandal, but his legal activities before his arrest. In his DNA you get a snapshot of the governmental philosophy that has guided the war effort both in Iraq and at home (that would be the Department of Homeland Security) and doomed it to failure.

Safavian, a former lobbyist, had a hand in U.S. spending, first as chief of staff of the General Services Administration and then as the White House's chief procurement officer, overseeing a kitty of $300 billion (plus $62 billion designated for Katrina relief). He arrived to help enforce a Bush management initiative called ``competitive sourcing.'' Simply put, this was a plan to outsource as much of government as possible by forcing U.S. agencies to compete with private contractors and their K Street lobbyists for huge and lucrative assignments. The initiative's objective, as the administration's chief executive officially put it, was to deliver ``high-quality services to our citizens at the lowest cost.''

The result was low-quality services at high cost: the creation of a shadow government of private companies rife with both incompetence and corruption. Last week Representative Henry Waxman, Democrat of California, who commissioned the first comprehensive study of Bush administration contracting, revealed that the U.S. procurement spending supervised for a time by Safavian had increased by $175 billion from 2000 to 2005. (Halliburton contracts alone, unsurprisingly, went up more than 600 percent.) Nearly 40 cents of every dollar in U.S. discretionary spending now goes to private companies.

In this favor-driven world of fat contracts awarded to the well-connected, Safavian was only an aspiring consigliere. He was not powerful enough or in government long enough to do much beyond petty reconnaissance for Abramoff and his lobbying clients. But the Bush brand of competitive sourcing, with its get-rich-quick schemes and do- little jobs for administration pals, spread like a cancer throughout the executive branch. It explains why tens of thousands of displaced victims of Katrina are still living in trailer shantytowns all these months later. It explains why New York and Washington just lost 40 percent of their counterterrorism funds. It helps explain why U.S. troops are more likely to be slaughtered than greeted with flowers more than three years after the American invasion of Iraq.

The Department of Homeland Security, in keeping with the Bush administration's original opposition to it, isn't really a government agency at all so much as an empty shell, a networking boot camp for future private contractors dreaming of big paydays. Thanks to an investigation by The New York Times, we know that some two-thirds of the top department executives, including Tom Ridge and his principal deputies, have cashed in on their often brief service by becoming executives, consultants or lobbyists for companies that have received billions of dollars in government contracts. Even John Ashcroft, the first former attorney general in American history known to immediately register as a lobbyist, is selling his Homeland Security connections to interested bidders. ``When you got it, flaunt it!'' as they say in The Producers.

To see the impact of such revolving- door cronyism, just look at the Homeland Security process that mandated those cutbacks for New York and Washington. The official in charge, the assistant secretary for grants and training, is Tracy Henke, an Ashcroft apparatchik from the Justice Department who was best known for trying to politicize the findings of its Bureau of Justice Statistics. Under Henke math, it follows that St. Louis, in her home state (and Ashcroft's), has seen its counterterrorism allotment rise by more than 30 percent while that for the cities actually attacked on 9/11 fell. And guess what: The private contractor hired by Homeland Security to consult on Henke's handiwork, Booz Allen Hamilton, now just happens to employ Greg Rothwell, who was the department's procurement chief until December. Booz Allen recently nailed a $250 million Homeland Security contract for technology consulting.

The continuing Katrina calamity is another fruit of outsourced government. As detailed in the current Washington Monthly, the die was cast long before the storm hit: The Bush cronies installed at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, first Joe Allbaugh and then Michael Brown, had privatized so many of the agency's programs that there was little government left to manage the disaster even if more competent managers than Brownie had been in charge.

But the most lethal impact of competitive sourcing, as measured in human cost, is playing out in Iraq. In the standard narrative of American failure in the war, the pivotal early error was Donald Rumsfeld's decision to ignore the advice of General Eric Shinseki and others, who warned that several hundred thousand troops would be needed to secure Iraq once America inherited it. But equally reckless, we can now see, was the administration's lax privatization of the country's reconstruction, often with pet companies and campaign contributors and without safeguards or accountability to guarantee results.

Washington's promises to rebuild Iraq were worth no more than its promises to rebuild New Orleans. The government that has stranded a multitude of Americans in flimsy ``housing'' on the Gulf of Mexico, where they remain prey for any new natural attacks the hurricane season will bring, is of a philosophical and operational piece with the government that has let down the Iraqi people. Even after we've thrown away $2 billion of a budgeted $4 billion on improving electricity, many Iraqis have only a few hours of power a day, less than they did under Saddam Hussein. At his Rose Garden press conference of June 14, the first American president with an MBA claimed that yet another new set of ``benchmarks'' would somehow bring progress even after all his previous benchmarks had failed to impede three years of reconstruction catastrophes.

Of the favored companies put in charge of America's supposed good works in Iraq, Halliburton is the most notorious. But it is hardly unique. As The Los Angeles Times reported in April, it is the Parsons Corp. that is responsible for the ``wholesale failure in two of the most crucial areas of the Iraq reconstruction - health and safety - which were supposed to win Iraqi good will and reduce the threat to American soldiers.''

Parsons finished only 20 of 150 planned Iraq health clinics, somehow spending $60 million of the budgeted $186 million for its own management and administration. It failed to build walls around seven of the 17 security forts it constructed to supposedly stop the flow of terrorists across the Iran border. Last week, The New York Times reported, the Army Corps of Engineers ordered Parsons to abandon construction on a hopeless $99.1 million prison that was two years behind schedule. By Waxman's calculation, $30 billion in U.S. taxpayers' money has been squandered on these and other Iraq boondoggles botched by a government adhering to the principle of competitive sourcing.

If America had honored its grand promises to the people it was liberating, Dick Cheney's prediction that we would be viewed as liberators might have had a chance of coming true. Greater loyalty from the civilian population would have helped reduce the threat to American soldiers, who are prey to insurgents in places like Yusufiya. But what we've wrought instead is a variation on Arthur Miller's post-World War II drama, All My Sons. Working from a true story, Miller told the tragedy of a shoddy contractor whose defectively manufactured aircraft parts led directly to the deaths of a score of army pilots and implicitly to the death of his own son.

Back then such a scandal was a shocking anomaly. Franklin Roosevelt's administration, the very model of big government that the current administration vilifies, never would have trusted private contractors to run the show. Somehow that unwieldy, bloated government took less time to win World War II than George W. Bush's privatized government is taking to blow this one.